Mastercard CEO Michael Miebach said on Tuesday that he does not expect SWIFT, one of the most widely used platforms for cross-border fiat transactions, to exist in five years’ time.
Miebach was speaking at a panel session on central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) as part of the Global Blockchain Business Council’s (GBBC) Blockchain Central Davos conference, which ran adjacent to the World Economic Forum 2022 in Davos, Switzerland.
Kicking off GBBC’s #BlockchainCentral Davos session on CBDCs with @eva_szalay @FT @YuvalRooz @digitalassetcom @Jbrookslassiter @Digital_Dollar_ @MiebachMichael @Mastercard @BIS_org @DBTreat @Accenture pic.twitter.com/C2fvgy0Bij
— Global Blockchain Business Council (GBBC) (@GBBCouncil) May 24, 2022
Toward the end of the panel discussion, when the moderator asked each panelist whether they thought SWIFT would still exist in five years, Miebach caused the audience to gasp in shock after answering “No,” according to a Cointelegraph reporter who attended the session.
The response was not expected, given his position at Mastercard and that the panelists before him — including Jon Frost, a senior economist at the Bank of International Settlements, and Jennifer Lassiter, executive director of the Digital Dollar project, an organization tasked with exploring a United States CBDC — answered in the affirmative.
Other panelists following Miebach also took the affirmative viewpoint, including Yuval Rooz, CEO of Digital Asset — a data technology company — and David Treat, director at Accenture and co-lead of the company’s blockchain business.
Cointelegraph approached Miebach immediately following the panel discussion but was denied any further comment on the subject.
Later, a Mastercard spokesperson downplayed Miebach’s comments in an email statement:
“Let us clarify the intent of the on-stage comment, as it’s not as simple as a yes or no answer. Michael was simply reinforcing what SWIFT has previously said — their operations continue to evolve. Its current form will not be the same in the future. They are adding more functionality and moving past just being a messaging system.”
SWIFT processed 42 million messages per day last year, but transactions on the network can take several days to complete. The company has been striving to maintain its relevance in the international economic order, especially with the rise of CBDCs.
To this end, SWIFT has been exploring the use of CBDCs to facilitate seamless cross-border payments since as early as May 2021 when it released a joint paper with Accenture looking at how digital currencies can help cross-border payments.
Related: WEF 2022: Blockchain community breaks stereotypes at Davos
On May 19, SWIFT announced its second round of experiments involving CBDCs, collaborating with French IT company Capgemini to explore the linking of domestic CBDCs to facilitate seamless cross-border payments.
We’re collaborating with @Capgemini to explore how SWIFT can interlink the multiple domestic-based #CBDC networks emerging worldwide to make cross-border payments with #DigitalCurrencies more seamless & frictionless.
Learn more: https://t.co/SgvjDf1dl4 pic.twitter.com/99g99A070H
— SWIFT (@swiftcommunity) May 19, 2022
Cointelegraph reporters on the ground at Davos noted that in another panel session titled “Rules of the Road for Digital Economy,” Miebach talked about the role regulation can take in reducing the unnecessary noise around a nascent technology like crypto.
“Not everyone is screaming for regulation, but it does reduce the noise in the crypto world. Engaging actively with regulators and being principled, I am optimistic,” he said.